| 1890 - 612 ページ
...that each science was dependent upon, and rose out of the one preceding it, and was as follows : (1) mathematics, (2) astronomy, (3) physics, (4) chemistry, (5) biology, (6) sociology. The relations of the facts of human society cannot be discovered without reference to the conditions of... | |
| John Kells Ingram - 1900 - 170 ページ
...fundamental sciences according to the fixed order in which they respectively attain the positive state — i. Mathematics ; 2. Astronomy ; 3. Physics ; 4. Chemistry ; 5. Biology ; 6. Sociology ; and 7. Morals. This is not the place to expound or vindicate these laws, which contain in condensed... | |
| Marcus Benjamin, Arthur Elmore Bostwick, Gerald Van Casteel, George Jotham Hagar - 1910 - 548 ページ
...society and life. The " hierarchy of the positive sciences " thus came out in the following order : ( 1 ) Mathematics, ( 2 ) astronomy, ( 3 ) physics, (4) chemistry, (5) biology, (6) sociology (the most complex and specialized of all). As a result of his personal experiences, abt. 1845 Comte developed... | |
| 1923 - 1190 ページ
...was mainly a critique of Comte who had classified and arranged the positive sciences in the order : ( i ) Mathematics; (2) Astronomy; (3) Physics; (4) Chemistry; (5) Biology; (6) Sociology. Spencer classifies the sciences in three sections ; those which deal with relations only — (a) Abstract... | |
| Marcus Benjamin, Arthur Elmore Bostwick, Gerald Van Casteel, George Jotham Hagar - 1910 - 546 ページ
...society and life. The " hierarchy of the positive sciences " thus came out in the following order: (1) Mathematics, (2) astronomy, (3) physics, (4) chemistry, (5) biology, (6) sociology (the most complex and specialized of all). As a result of his personal experiences, abt. 1845 Comte developed... | |
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